The homeowner sat across from me at her kitchen table, three quotes spread out in front of her. Mine was the highest by almost $4,000.
She looked at me and said, "Why should I pay more?"
I didn't get defensive. I pulled out my phone, opened my estimate breakdown, and walked her through every line item — materials separated by room, labor broken down by phase, even the waste factor on tile. It took maybe 90 seconds.
She signed right there.
The other two contractors had scribbled numbers on a notepad and called it a quote. One of them didn't even itemize paint — just wrote "painting: $6,200" and moved on.
That's not estimating. That's guessing with a straight face.
I've been painting and renovating in the Bahamas since 1992. I've watched contractors win jobs they had no business winning — and lose jobs they should have closed in their sleep. The difference was never the price. It was the presentation.
Here's what nobody tells you about running a trade business: your estimate is the first and only time most clients will see you as a professional before the work starts. If it looks like you did it in your truck between jobs, they'll assume the work will look the same way.
The Real Cost of Bad Estimating
Most contractors I know estimate the same way they did in 1995. They walk the job, take some mental notes, maybe jot down square footage, then go home and piece together a number based on what they charged last time something looked similar.
Here's what that costs you:
You lose jobs on price — not because you're too expensive, but because you can't show the value. When a client sees a lump sum with no breakdown, they assume you're padding it.
You win jobs at the wrong price — you lowball because you're afraid of losing, then spend three weeks on a job that's bleeding money.
You can't track job costs — six months later, you have no idea whether that bathroom remodel actually made money or just kept your crew busy.
You're stuck in the business — every evening and weekend goes to paperwork because estimating takes 20, 30, sometimes 45 minutes per job. Multiply that by five quotes a week and you're losing half a day to work that should take minutes.
What The Uninformed Contractor Does:
Walks a job. Writes down some measurements. Goes home. Spends 20 minutes trying to remember what paint costs now. Guesses at labor hours. Types it up in a Word document that looks like it was designed in 2003. Sends it. Waits. Usually loses.
What The Smart Contractor Does:
Walks a job. Opens their phone. Selects the job type. Adjusts a few fields for square footage and material grade. Hits send. The client gets a professional, itemized quote — with their company logo on it — before the contractor even gets back to the truck.
That second contractor isn't smarter. They just stopped pretending they could do it all in their head.
The Tool That Changed My Estimating
About a year ago I started using QuoteIQ. It's estimating software built specifically for trade contractors — painters, handymen, pressure washers, GCs. Not some generic invoicing app. Not a spreadsheet with a logo slapped on it.
Here's what it does for me:
Pre-built templates by trade. I select "interior painting" or "pressure washing" and the line items are already there. I just adjust quantities and material grades.
Professional quotes in under two minutes. I'm not exaggerating. I timed it. From opening the app to sending a client-ready PDF with my logo, breakdown, and terms: under 120 seconds.
Job costing built in. Every quote tracks material estimates against actual costs. I know which jobs made money and which ones didn't — before the check clears, not six months later.
Clients see the breakdown. When they can see exactly where every dollar goes, they stop negotiating. They trust you.
I don't recommend tools I don't use. QuoteIQ lives on my phone. I used it this morning on a quote for a 2,200-square-foot exterior repaint. The estimate was done before I finished my coffee.
You can try it here: QuoteIQ — Estimating Software for Trade Contractors
Why This Matters More Than You Think
The trades are filling up with younger contractors who grew up with apps and software. They're not faster than you at painting or framing or tiling. But they're faster at the business side — and that's what clients see first.
You didn't spend 10, 20, or 30 years in this trade to lose work to someone who just figured out how to send a professional quote.
The work speaks for itself — but only after you get the job. The estimate is what gets you in the door.
Stop guessing. Get a system.
I've been running Kerr's Painting & Renovations in the Bahamas since 1992. Everything I recommend is something I use on actual job sites. No theory. No affiliate fluff. Just what works.
Get The Pro DIYer's Tool & Technique Guide — free.
I put 34 years of job-site experience into this. No courses to buy — just the guide.
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